State GOP says Kennedy not acting like a Kennedy after dust-up with reporters

Chris Kennedy may have the family name, but according to the state GOP, “he doesn’t act like it,” as he recently rejected reporters’ overtures in Chicago and simultaneously created a commotion in a downtown office building.

Granted, he has big shoes to fill. One uncle, John F.
Kennedy, was the nation’s 35th president; his father, Robert F. Kennedy, and another uncle,
Edward Kennedy, were both U.S. senators. All three were legendary political
figures, inspiring previous generations in the second half of the 20th century.

Reportedly, Chris Kennedy has hired staffers, possibly including strategist
Eric Adelstein, for a 2018 gubernatorial run in Illinois. Kennedy also met secretly with
House Speaker Mike Madigan (D-Chicago) over the summer, contributing $50,000 to Madigan’s re-election campaign. Madigan, in turn, endorsed Kennedy as "a very good candidate for governor."

However, Kennedy appeared indifferent to his family’s legacy
when reporter Mike Flannery of Chicago’s Fox 32 News asked him if he is
running for governor.

“Please,” Kennedy said in response to Flannery’s question —
waving several reporters away. “I don’t need to address you. Please leave the
elevator and let me go to my meeting. Please do that. Have some decency. What
have you become?”

“Apparently, talking to the Mike Madigans of the world is
good enough at this point for Chris Kennedy,” Flannery said afterward.

A recent Illinois Republican Party-sponsored ad seized on the incident, starkly comparing the famous words of Kennedy’s kin to
those uttered by the elusive scion rebuffing reporters in the Chicago elevator
kerfuffle.

“I don’t need to
address you … What have you become?” the spot repeated before directing viewers
to the GOP-sponsored website, BossMadigan.com.

“Chris Kennedy comes from a legendary American family
with a history of public service, but instead of following in their footsteps,
Chris Kennedy chose to serve corrupt politicians like Mike Madigan,” Illinois Republican Party spokesman Steven Yaffe said.